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An aerial view of the Dagahaley camp in Dadaab, near the Kenya-Somalia border in Garissa County, Kenya, April 3, 2011. Kenya wants to close the camps, which house more than 300,000 mostly Somali refugees.Thomas Mukoya/File Photo/Reuters

Kenya has also indicated it plans to close the Kakuma camp in the country’s northwest, which hosts 180,000 refugees mostly from South Sudan. The East African country is hosting more than 600,000 refugees in total.

In a statement issued on Wednesday, the Somali Ministry of Foreign Affairs expressed its “grave reservation” about Kenya’s stance. “This decision will negatively affect the majority of Somali refugees who are housed in the two camps and will make the threat of terrorism worse, not better, given the volatile situation this sudden decision and the proposed subsequent actions will cause,” the statement said.

Al-Shabab has been at war with Kenya since the latter’s invasion of Somalia in 2011 in response to repeated cross-border kidnappings by the group, which is aligned with Al-Qaeda. Militants affiliated to Al-Shabab have carried out several attacks on Kenyan soil, including the murder of at least 67 people at the Westgate shopping mall in Nairobi in September 2013 and the killing of 148 people at Garissa University College in April 2015.

Nkaissery said both the Westgate and Garissa attacks were “planned and deployed from Dadaab... by transnational terrorist groups.” The secretary also said that the camps were being used as “permanent settlements” and that the international community had failed to implement an agreement signed in 2013 by Kenya, Somalia and the United Nations Refugee Agency on repatriating refugees. “As a country, we have been glad to help our neighbors and all those in need, sometimes at the expense of our security. But there comes a time when we must think primarily about the security of our people... That time is now,” said Nkaissery’s statement.

Following the Garissa attack, Kenya announced in April 2015 that the Dadaab camps would be closed in three months but rowed back on the decision under international pressure. Its recent announcement has prompted criticism from the international community and domestic aid agencies. The U.N. Refugee Agency has said that Kenya’s decision could violate international obligations regarding the protection of refugees fleeing danger and persecution, particularly since conflict is still raging in parts of Somalia and, to a lesser extent, South Sudan.

The Kenya National Commission on Human Rights said that the government’s decision constituted a “blanket condemnation of all refugees as threats to security” and urged a distinction to be made between criminal and non-criminal elements in the camps.

If camps have criminal elements,let the govt use its security processes to go to the camp and identify the same,not discriminate all persons

Hoda Muthana's father, Ahmed Ali Muthana, filed the lawsuit in Washington D.C., and "seeks injunctive relief preventing the United States government from unconstitutionally robbing (Muthana and her son) of their rights as United States citizens."

"The ice doesn’t care what this administration thinks. It’s just going to keep melting," David Titley, the director of the Center for Solutions to Weather and Climate Risk at Penn State, told Newsweek.